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Windows Phone 7 Series: Life In Motion

February 18th 2010 05:55
This was the Windows Phone 7 Teaser Video Shown At The World Congress Demonstration in Spain 2010. Probably aimed at Apple?? Google?? Take a look..



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No Thinly Veiled Bias Here

October 5th 2007 03:41
None whatsoever, it's so blatant one can't help but wonder how the hell APC can be taken seriously considering some of its articles. Angus Kidman and his fantasticly ambiguous question 'Can IE's architect explain why it's so bloated?' is of particular note, which he kicks off by completely blowing his credibility:

My attempts to interview Chris Wilson, Microsoft's platform architect for Internet Explorer, appear threatened by technical difficulties even before the discussion begins. His temporary-conference-visitor speaker phone in Sydney won't work, then my computer crashes just before the interview starts, which in the sub-planet of Vista I'm forced to inhabit means a ten-minute reboot time.


Is he serious? ten minute reboot time? Does he realize, what with all his 'experience' that if you're having to wait ten minutes to boot up Vista then theres something wrong with the PC, not the operating system.

But you know, he gets off because he took a jab at Microsoft.

Of course he goes on,

There's nothing IE users like more than whining about performance and rendering problems.

I think he's mistaking Firefox fanboys and IE users here. I used to use Firefox until Vista and IE7 changed all that, but I don't whine about IE7s 'rendering problems' of which I haven't come across any. Of course I can't vouch for the millions of other IE7 users, but the mere fact I use the damned thing and don't whine about its supposed performance and rendering problems means his statement is null and void anyway.

Fixing this particular bug requires bizarre solutions such as switching off User Account Control, effectively meaning you have to choose between a browser that's more secure and a browser that actually works.

UAC is one of those things MS decided to use to give the illusion of extra security that is some how worth the pain would win them free rep points (which it did, sadly). Ironically the browser works fine UAC or not, so I don't know where Angus is coming from, might have his head up his ass too high.

Wilson is still talking as I fume. "A lot of the things that make IE larger are really that it's delivered as a set of system services that are essentially atoms for Windows. You can use just parts of the browser. It's componentised very specifically so you can do that.

Clearly Wilson has to sit back and listen to you rant and rave how open source is going to destroy Microsoft, as you were no doubt doing five years ago when Vista was going to be a completely closed system in which only a select few developers could make programs for. Of course that turned out to be bullshit, no doubt gaining traction from people like yourself.

OK, I'll try another tack. Given that the most obvious change in IE7 was the introduction of tabs, a feature rather obviously filched from Firefox, what feature from a rival browser would Wilson most like to adopt next?

Oh noes, Microsoft stealing from Firefox, how evil of them. I suppose Firefox was the first browser to have tabbed browsing? Oh you wish.

What are his thoughts, then, on Google's Gears initiative, which sidesteps the first problem by providing an interface that's basic but functional (rather than, say, needlessly bloated like Vista's Aero), and is working hard to solve the data issue?

Aero is bloated? I guess Apple and the Open Source community know how to be subtle with their UIs.

In conclusion, Misterrrr Angus is clearly a grade A moron, hoping to get some popularity from attacking Microsoft with unfounded or completely irrelevent points (sometimes both).
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Microsoft Anti Competitive Behaviour
Microsoft has always been the best friend of the programmer, in fact when compared to the likes of Apple or IBM it looks like they're in another entire business altogether. Just what has gotten into the minds of the morons up in the EU who seem to beconvinced of Microsoft’s dastardly plans like some moronic Linux fanboy?

What’s even more disgusting is the fact the EU is charing Microsoft with the same behaviours companies like Apple make an actual business model out of. Microsoft is being asked to reveal its 'secrets' to allow third party developers to better compete with them on their own OS.

The very fact Microsoft provides an avenue for third parties to effectively compete with them is simply amazing, since when has Apple ever provided as much raw developer support as Microsoft has? Is it that Microsoft is dominating the industry that they get all this unfair treatment? By that line of thought we should start punishing every company that establishes market dominance in any field.

Microsoft has always made it clear that they have the developers interests in mind more so than their own. It's simple logic, when developers make great software for the Windows platform more people buy Windows. The reasoning for this rulling is based on a complete fallacy, since when could developers not be able to compete with Microsoft because they didn't know 'Windows secrets'?

We have some excellent third party software, many of which people would argue runs better than Microsoft products, and none needed the oh so mysterious 'windows secrets' to run. For instance if you look at computer games, you find that Microsoft actually makes them for Windows and XBox. Interestingly enough Microsoft does not produce the highest rated titles. In fact Microsoft Games developers are given the same resources as any other developer. There is no vast conspiracy, no hiddten technology or secrets that gives Microsoft an edge when developing software. Yet it would seem the EU is convinced.

This is no more than a carefully collaborated conspiracy by the EU to destroy Microsoft. When companies like Apple or IBM can do the exact something as Microsoft has and get away with it you know there’s something going on. Perhaps, like a certain other anti-competitive case filed Microsoft, we have Microsoft competitors in the backgrounds pulling the strings. Trying to take the company down through political means. Kind of difficult to do otherwise.

When it comes down to it all the EU has actually ruled that Microsoft is legally required to help its competitors even if it means Microsoft will lose a lot of its own technolog in the process. It would appear that already helping its competitors develop software for its operating system (which has without a doubt been the reason Windows has gained such popularity) isn't enough, now they have to let them see their source code and trade secrets (that are otherwise irrelevent to the 3rd party developer). What next? Will Microsoft be legally obliged to debug their competitor’s code?
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Firefox is Proof Open Source is Failing

September 16th 2007 09:12
The general consensus is that the open source isn't gaining traction is because Microsoft is doing what it needs to from a business standpoint to buy out/take hostage the consumer. However the massive popularity of Firefox is proof enough that this simply can't be the case.

When it comes down to it all you just have to look at it in perspective. Every Windows machine ships with a copy of Internet Explorer for free, yet consumers are actively finding and download Firefox. What of Word Processing software? People pay money for Microsoft Office, and it sure isn't cheap, it doesn't even necessarily come with every Windows PC and additional components will invariably cost more (such as Excel, PowerPoint, etc


[ Click here to read more ]
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If there was ever a time to change banks this would be it. Westpac is poised to ‘upgrade’ 20,000 PC’s to Microsoft’s new operating system “Windows Vista” by December.

Westpac enterprise services chief information Officer David Backley is apparently unconcerned to be jumping straight into Microsoft’s to-be-released operating system. He reasons he would it’s better to upgrade instead of ‘wait for problems to appear with the current support environment


[ Click here to read more ]
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